Tuesday, 19 November 2013

Last week Erwin, PE2ER, informed me that he had an assembly kit of a 23 cm amplifier. Since I am involved with some ATV activities these days, he asked me if I could use this kit. I struggled with some PA designs last weeks ( with power modules or CLY15) and therefore I was very glad with this offer. Last sunday I assembled the 1.2 GHz amplifier which is a design of PA0VRE from 2002.It contains two SHF transistors: A BFQ68 and a BFQ136. The amplifier is able to generate 5 Watts RF power at 1.2 GHz with 200 mW input.Assembling the kit was a delicate job. Some very small SMDs (2p2) had to find their way to the pcb and the whole circuit is mounted on a heatsink. All details are here: http://www.van-rees.nl/23pa/versieNL.PDFAnyway, after building the first test on the bench were promising.

The 23 cm amplifier finishedThis morning I connected the amplifier to the ATV baseband circuit, connected the biquad antenna to the amp and pointed the antenna to the local ATV repeater and switched the power on.A nice steady ATV signal at 10 GHz from PI6ZTM came back for me:

Sunday, 10 November 2013

Time to unite the module with the rest of the circuit which I had prepared already according to the design of VK5TM: http://www.vk5tm.com/homebrew/dds/dds.phpSee also my blog posting of October 25 showing how the control circuitry with 16F628A PIC and display has been designed.

Test set-up. The generator provides a 7380 KHz signal which is monitored by the frequency counter in the back. It was verfied that the generator upper frequency is 40 MHz.

I added a small seperate power supply circuit with a LM317T to provide a 3.3 Vdc voltage for the DDS module. The module is located on the right upper side of the housing.

The sine output of the DDS module is fed to a filter circuit with a cutoff frequency of appr. 60 MHz.

A 1 transistor output stage with 2N3904 provides some gain.

1 stage transistor amplifier

Below you see the output of the DDS Generator on my scope. This looks like a real sine form don't you think so? In this case a 17.460 MHz signal was applied. 6 divisions times 0.4 Volts makes a signal amplitude of 2.4 Volts peak-peak. At the end of the range (40 MHz) the amplitude drops to about 1.6 Volts peak-peak

Anyway, I think we are spoilt these days with nice electronics like this 40 MHz DDS module for sale for under $ 5...

Tuesday, 5 November 2013

This weekend, to my surprise, I was able to make a nice SSB QSO with Iceland with only 20 Watts. Odinn, TF2MSN, responded on my call on 28.490 MHz. I have made previous contacts with Iceland on 10m, but all are in digimode.Odinn, who lives on the west side of Iceland in Akranes, has a nice QSL-design:

The QSO was was confirmed by eQSL:

Since conditions this weekend on 28 MHz were fine, I diverted to 24 MHz, one of the WARC bands, to add some contacts on this band. This trial on November 3 was quite succesful:24.980 MHz - SSB qso with LZ1GU24.950 MHz - SSB qso with SV2DSJ/p (SOTA event)24.912 MHz - CW with SX1DX24.920 MHz - PSK63 with EB5DZC24.920 MHz - PSK31 with RN5AA24.920 MHz - PSK31 with EA7ZY

Mikhail , RN5AA, from Moscow sent me this fb eQSL of a 24 MHz digimode QSO

Friday, 1 November 2013

For more
than 5 years, for HF communications I use the G5RV Junior antenna covering the 10, 15, 17, 20, 30 and 40 meter ham bands. It has 2 radiators of 7.75 m length each
connected to a 450 ohm ladder line. Termination is an SO-239
jack to connect to the RG58 50 ohms coaxial cable running to the rig. This
antenna can be erected in a dipole or inverted V configuration. I choose the
inverted V option. One radiator runs over the rooftop of my house and the other
radiator runs above my garden.The
antenna can handle up to 1500 watts
(Allthough I normally run not more than appr. 20 Watts RF)

The G5RV
junior antenna is a derivative from the G5RV which was originally designed to
work on 20m with 4 to 6 low angle lobes reaching out in all directions.

I use the
antenna in combination with an antenna
tuner connected to the Yaesu FT-450 and have made hundreds of QSO’s with this
aerial. It has survived many hi winds including last storm of Monday October 28 (up till windforce 10 in Zoetermeer) which blew away three of my tiles.

Replacement of tiles after the storm. Part of the G5RV jr antenna can be seen on the lefthand side